The Never King: Chapter 13
The Never King (Vicious Lost Boys Book 1)
Kas and I are in the hammocks strung up between palm trees down by the beach. I havenât told Kas yet about the trouble I caused last night.
Using a long stick, he shoves off the ground, getting the hammock to swing again. Then he pushes me with it, jamming the stick into my ass.
âFucker,â I say.
He laughs.
A gull dares to come closer, hoping we have some scraps to give, but I only have a length of rope in my hands. Tying knots soothes me.
âI have to tell you something,â I say to my twin.
The rope hammock groans beneath Kas as he resettles. âIâm listening.â
âI fucked the Darling.â
Heâs suddenly silent, but the hammock still creaks. Another wave laps against the shore. A sand fly lands on my arm and I smack it beneath my palm, smashing guts on my skin.
âWhen should I start planning your funeral?â Kas finally says.
âVery funny.â
âHeâll kill you. Surprised he hasnât yet.â
I take a handful of white sand from the ground beneath me and grind it against my arm, cleaning off the guts.
âWhat happened?â he asks.
âPan caught us and told me to keep fucking her. Honestly, I think the Darling liked it.â
My cock twitches, remembering the feel of her tight little pussy. Iâve never given in to a Darling before, as much as Iâve wanted to. I like fucking. I like fucking what I shouldnât even more.
âHow was she?â my twin asks.
Iâm hard now, aching for more.
âSlutty, just the way I like them.â
He blows out a breath. âYouâre such a fucking asshole.â
âYeah, well, the whole reason I went into her room last night was because of you.â
âYou keep telling yourself that.â
Up the hill, I can just make out Cherry crossing the balcony and scanning the beach. When she spots us, she comes down.
Iâm not in the mood for Cherry.
Iâm not sure Iâve ever been.
Unlike the Darling, Iâve always had free access to Cherry. Takes away some of the fun.
âHi,â she says when she comes up. âCan Winnie come to the bonfire tonight?â
Kas gives me another gentle push with the stick. âWhy?â he asks.
âI thought it might be good for her while we wait for the full moon.â
âPan will say no.â
Cherry puts her hands on her hips. âWe have a bonfire every night. Since when do we need his permission?â
âWe donât,â I say, âbut heâll certainly have an opinion about the Darling attending.â
âIâll take care of Pan.â
Kas laughs at the sky. âJust what the fuck do you think youâre going to say to Peter Pan to make him bend to you?â
âHeâs not as unreasonable as you both make him out to be.â She squints as the wind shifts and the palms break open allowing the sun to stream in. âBesides, where is she going to go? Thereâs nowhere to run.â
âLooks like you did plenty of running last night,â I say.
Kas frowns at me and says, Stop teasing her.
Why, when itâs so easy to get her flustered?
âStop doing that,â she says.
âDoing what?â
âTalking in your fae language. I can hear the bells, but not the words and it annoys me.â She huffs.
âWe were just discussing the Death Shadow is all,â I lie. âDid it give you the best, most terrifying orgasm of your life, Cherry?â
Her face pinks.
To be honest, Iâm surprised sheâs upright and walking.
When Vaneâs shadow takes over, it fucking terrifies me and heâs not trying to fuck me.
âIâm not talking about my sex life with you two anymore,â she says. Then, âSo can she?â
âI suppose,â I say. âYou know how much I love pretty girls and parties.â
âBecause youâre a self-absorbed prick,â Kas says.
âHeâs not wrong,â I tell Cherry.
âWill you make the food?â she asks me.
âIs there anyone better?â I donât wait for her to answer. âNo. Thereâs not. So yes, Iâll make the food.â
âGood. Letâs say seven.â
âI thought you were going to ask Pan first? The sun doesnât set till eight-thirty at the earliest.â
She smirks. âI will ask him. For forgiveness.â
âBrave little Cherry,â I say. âFine. Now go away.â
She rolls her eyes, then starts back up the hill, disappearing through the palm fronds.
âYou think you can keep your dick in your pants tonight?â Kas asks.
âDoubtful.â
He pokes me with the stick again. I snatch it from his grasp and whack him with it.
He laughs and rubs the sore spot. âIf you get us kicked out of the treehouse, weâll have nowhere else to go. So behave yourself.â
âPan doesnât kick people out. He thins them out. If Pan grows tired of us, weâre dead. So really I donât know why youâre worried.â
He grumbles to himself.
I close my eyes and sink back into the hammock. The ropes tied around the tree creak. Weâre quiet again and then Kas says, âTilly will be here tomorrow night.â
âI know.â
âI miss our sister.â
I sigh. âI do too.â And the palace. And the court drama. I thrived in that place.
âYou think sheâll ever forgive us?â
âI donât think so.â
Itâs hard to forgive your brothers when they gutted your father right in front of you.
âYou know what Iâve been wondering about since Merry?â Kas asks.
âWhatâs that?â
âI wonder if our dear sister is really doing what she claims to be doing with the Darlings.â
Now my eyes are wide open. âYou think sheâs lying to Pan?â
Kas turns in the hammock so his feet are in the sand. âWhat if she is? What would we do about it?â
âThat is a loaded question.â
âI know it is.â
We drop it then and there.
I think weâre both afraid of the answer.